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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- As our journalists in three cities set out to cover the
- astonishing events in the Soviet Union last week, none of us
- could guess the outcome. We were certain of one thing, though:
- our staff has an extraordinary wealth of expertise on the
- subject.
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- Heading the team in Moscow was bureau chief John Kohan,
- who studied Russian in the U.S. and Leningrad, and has reported
- and written stories on the Soviet Union since 1975. On hand too
- were correspondent James Carney and reporter Ann Simmons, both
- Russian speakers. During the unsettling days and nights after
- the announcement of the coup, invaluable assistance came from
- the bureau staff -- secretary Emma Petrova, driver Boris Tyunin
- and office researcher Yuri Zarakhovich, the first Soviet citizen
- to file for TIME as a formally accredited reporter.
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- In New York City we had senior writer Bruce Nelan, a
- former Moscow bureau chief who wrote our 1989 Man of the Decade
- cover story on Gorbachev. Working with him were assistant editor
- Brigid O'Hara-Forster, whose research about Soviet politics is
- given added breadth by her abiding interest in the works of
- Chekhov, and Kevin Fedarko, who has a master's in Russian
- history and literature. In Washington, Strobe Talbott and David
- Aikman provided insights gained doing numerous Soviet stories.
- Since 1969, when he was an intern in the Moscow bureau, Strobe
- has made nearly 30 trips to the Soviet Union. His story on
- Gorbachev and the hard-liners in this week's special section
- draws on reporting from a visit there early this summer. Talbott
- is collaborating with historian Michael Beschloss on a book
- about the Bush-Gorbachev relationship, to be published next
- year. Aikman, who has a Ph.D. in Russian and Chinese history,
- has followed Boris Yeltsin since 1989 and has twice interviewed
- the Russian leader. When he visited New York City in 1989,
- Aikman recalls, "I once had to practically leap upon his back
- to stop him from crossing Second Avenue as a garbage truck bore
- down upon the intersection. He turned around gratefully,
- grinned, and said, `The KGB would not be pleased to know that
- you may have saved my life.' " Instead, as our story explains,
- Yeltsin's career is prospering.
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- -- Elizabeth P. Valk
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